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Born:
1866
Berkeley County, West Virginia
Died:
1955
New York City
Biography:
Born near Falling Waters, West Virginia
on a plantation a year after the Civil War, and raised in Baltimore,
William Leigh became one of the foremost painters of the American
West with a career of seventy-five years. Some people referred
to him as the "Sagebrush
Rembrandt".
He was the son of impoverished Southern aristocrats and took his
first art training at age 14 from Hugh Newell (1830-1915) at the
Maryland Institute where he was regarded as one of the best students
in his class. From 1883 to 1895, he studied in Europe, mainly at
the Royal Academy in Munich with Ludwig Loefftz. From 1891 to 1896,
he painted six cycloramas or murals in the round, a giant German
panoroma.
In 1896, he began working as a magazine
illustrator in New York City for "Scribner's" and "Collier's Weekly Magazine," and
he also painted portraits, landscapes, and genre scenes. However,
he was not a very successful artist in those years in New York.
Trips to the Southwest began in 1906 when he made an agreement
with William Simpson, Santa Fe Railway advertising manager, to
paint the Grand Canyon in exchange for free transportation West.
In 1907, he completed his Grand Canyon painting, which led to many
more commissions and an extensive painting trip through Arizona
and New Mexico. These travels inspired him to paint western subjects
for the next 50 years, but it was not until the 1940s that he received
much recognition. He painted in the Southwest nearly every summer
between 1912 and 1926 and focused on the Hopi and Navajo Indians.
In 1910, he traveled to Wyoming, where
he painted in Yellowstone Park and did sketches, many which he
later converted into large canvases such as "Lower Falls of the Yellowstone"(1915)
and "Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone" (1911).
His style was realistic, and his palette invariably had the Southwestern
hues of soft pinks, reds, yellows and purples. In fact, his critics
who knew little of the Southwest accused him of fabricating the
colors.
As an older man he was described as a big, powerful man with gray
hair and a white handlebar mustache and a deep base voice. He was
highly opinionated and absolutely hated modern, abstract art. During
the latter part of his career, he painted a series of American
historical murals as well as paintings based on his travels to
Africa funded by the Eastman Kodak Company and the American Museum
of Natural History in New York. For many years, his work was handled
exclusively in New York at the Grand Central Art Galleries at the
Biltmore Hotel.
Many of his works are at the Gilcrease Museum in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
In March, 1999, the Historical Center of Cody, Wyoming held an
exhibition of his field sketches and finished works depicting his
experiences near Cody, Wyoming in the early part of the century,
between 1910 and 1921. These years, many which he spent painting
in the Carter Mountain vicinity, were considered crucial to his
artistic development because he was exposed to western landscape.
His companion during these travels was Cody taxidermist Will Richard
who stirred his interest in wildlife.
Credit: 300 YEARS OF AMERICAN ART by David Zellman, ARTISTS OF
THE AMERICAN WEST by Peggy and Harold Samuels, DRAWN TO YELLOWSTONE
by Peter Hassrick
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